On September 20, the Richmond chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) released a statement endorsing Montigue Magruder’s campaign. Magruder is a Green Party candidate for Delegate in the 69th District of Virginia, which encompasses portions of Chesterfield County and Richmond City. He hopes to replace Betsy Carr, a Democrat who has been the incumbent since 2010.

“He is an explicitly socialist candidate, and he doesn’t try to hide that,” Alex Sparrow, member of the Richmond DSA chapter and communications strategist on the Magruder campaign, said. “There are a lot of issues on the platform that are things that socialists should support, [such as] the minimum wage raise, universal healthcare, environmental issues like opposition to the pipelines, [and] expanding democracy, especially in Virginia where you have voter suppression and felon disenfranchisement.”

Magruder decided to run as a Green Party candidate, despite his campaign having some similarities to that of Vermont independent Bernie Sanders, who ran as a Democrat in the last presidential primary,

“It costs fifteen hundred dollars to run as a Democrat to get on the ballot,” Magruder said. “Knowing how the Democratic Party here in Richmond likes to protect the establishment incumbents, I know I wouldn’t have a fair chance at winning, because the deck would already be stacked against me from the jump.”

Magruder said that the popularity of Sanders’ campaign and rise of progressive groups such as the DSA increases his chances of winning the election.

“There are a lot of people in the district that were Berniecrats; they do not support Hillary Clinton,” Magruder said. “I have a better chance of winning that has been enhanced by groups like the Democratic Socialists of America, that openly endorse me, support my campaign, and recognize that their salvation is bound with mine.”

Magruder got into politics in 2010, when the GRTC Transit System proposed a set of fare increases. Magruder attended a city council meeting and spoke out against the changes, and since then, he has been involved in grassroots organizations such as the Richmond Transit Riders Union, Virginia Organizing, and the Residents of Public Housing in Richmond Against Mass Evictions. Magruder ran for city council last year, but many of the people he spoke to felt that the issues he wanted to address needed to be done so through the General Assembly, which is one reason why he decided to run for state office.

Magruder’s platform demonstrates his alignment with the DSA’s goals on quite a few points, including gerrymandering, the abandonment of the Atlantic Coast and Mountain Valley Pipelines, and criminal justice reform.

“There are a lot of people that I’ve talked to that would love to vote for me, but because they’re convicted felons, they are not able to vote,” Magruder said. “One of the priorities I have is to initiate a constitutional amendment to have the lifetime felon disenfranchisement rule stricken out of the constitution.”

Magruder’s platform also includes the proposal to raise the minimum wage to $26.80 an hour. While many have criticized the idea of raising minimum wage up to even $15 an hour, Magruder said that the increase would simply reflect what the minimum wage should be right now.

“If the minimum wage had kept up with the cost of living and working productivity since 1968, the living wage would be $26.80 an hour right now,” Magruder said. “My proposal is literally putting the minimum wage in line with where it’s supposed to be today. A lot of the policy positions I have are basically setting things right.”

Magruder said that once people research the issues featured on his platform, such as minimum wage, they become more accepting of them.

“That’s why I made my platform so comprehensive as it is, so it engages people’s desire to go out there and critically examine the ideas,” Magruder said. “That tends to change minds.”

Edwuan Whitehead, Magruder’s campaign manager, identifies as a Democrat but supports Magruder’s progressive policies. He also expresses disappointment with Carr’s work as the current incumbent.

“She’s always either run unopposed, or she’s run against a person that kind of has the same status as herself,” Whitehead said. “With Montigue, he understands the struggles that’s gone on within the district himself. He’s lived those struggles and it’s easier for people to relate to him.”

Despite the growing popularity of groups like the DSA, and the increased approval of their policies, Magruder’s campaign has seen a major lack of press coverage. Magruder cites the companies that mainstream press outlets are beholden to as one of reasons for the lack of news coverage.

“When you look at the entities that have their hands in the pockets of some of these media outlets – like the Richmond-Times Dispatch, Channel 6, Channel 8, and Channel 12 – when you see the kinds of corporations that advertise on those outlets, you quickly see how there would be a media blackout of this race,” Magruder said. “This is actually the only race in the Richmond-Metro that features both a Green Party and a Libertarian candidate on the ballot, and the last thing that the establishment wants is people being informed of their choices.”

Whitehead believes that the campaign can be successful without mainstream press coverage.

“It doesn’t have to be a media campaign to win the campaign,” Whitehead said. “We don’t have the money like that, to be able to spend on press coverage and time and things of that nature. I feel like us reaching out to the people that we have definitely has paid bigger dividends for that.”

With or without press coverage, Magruder hopes to win the campaign in order to properly represent the 69th district, as well as to make the Democratic party work harder to earn voters’ trust, Magruder said.

“If my victory, or even Jake Crocker’s victory, if either one of us were to win our races, we would break the Democrat stronghold, and that would actually force the Democrats to go out there throughout the 69th district and earn people’s votes once again,” Magruder said.

As for post-election hopes, in the event that Magruder gets elected and is required to work with a majority Republican General Assembly, Whitehead said that many of the issues Magruder is focusing on should not come down to bipartisanship.

“Things like education, healthcare, the rights of our young men and women and of the LGBTQIA community, and things like that should not be a party loyalty type of decision,” Whitehead said. “It should just be the basis of human morality at that point.”

The election is set to take place on November 7th, with deadlines for absentee ballots set for the last day of October.

Crocker has been involved in politics at the local level for years, particularly as president of both the Uptown Civic Association and the Fan Area Business Alliance.

“I’ve been very involved, and very passionate about small, community-owned businesses,” said Crocker. “And Richmond is filled with businesses that are not only in the city, but are owned by guys like me.”

Having pushed local issues for years, Crocker decided that now was the time to run for public office. His stance is uniquely libertarian and his concern is about limiting bureaucracy, which he says is “strangling small businesses.”

He finds that both the Democrats and the Republicans are responsible for this supposed government overreach, and that the problem stems from a lack of entrepreneurs in the General Assembly. Instead, Crocker claims that state government is composed mostly of “career politicians” who don’t understand how their legislation impacts the communities they serve.

Crocker’s belief in libertarianism stems from his beliefs in small government, claiming a “live and let live type of mentality” which removes government interference in citizens’ personal lives. As an example of this, he referenced the transgender bathroom debate that is currently buzzing around the country, saying that the government should not be involved in “what’s going on in your bedroom and your bathrooms.”

Crocker said that this downsized form of government “is where most of America is at right now, and that’s why you’re seeing the Libertarian Party gaining strength.”

Crocker is running against the Democrat incumbent for the 69th District, Betsy Carr.”My opponent has been in office for many years and been nothing but encouraging of my businesses, so I have no ill will toward her,” said Crocker. “I just think it’s time that we see a small business guy like myself get in there and help the rest of the General Assembly understand what we’re going through, and help our communities and our commonwealth thrive.”

He has identified as both a Democrat and a Republican in the past, but it was always libertarian ideas that intrigued him the most. He sees this as an advantage on election day, believing that, “as one side moves farther left and one side moves farther right, you have this big middle ground.” He does share some interests with the GOP, however, especially in terms of the kinds of fiscal conservatism that the party abandoned back in the 90’s.

“But the Republican Party has not preached that in quite some time, they’re a little all over the place these days,” he said.

Crocker’s libertarian ideals also overlap with the Democratic Party’s philosophy of social justice. He said that he decided he liked the Libertarian Party the best because he found it used the best concepts from both parties.

“Libertarians are the party that really makes sense to most people when you really get into their personal views and their personal politics,” said Crocker in conclusion.

The general election for the House of Delegates will also share a ballot with the gubernatorial race, which will take place on November 7, 2017.